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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

 

Trans- Tasman Round 3.

The 3rd round of the Trans- Tasman Teams took place last Friday night. New Zealand teams still occupy 6 of the top 8 positions in the 16 team competition though the leaders are now Australian Mixed Team who had a large victory over Skipper in Friday’s round. New Zealand teams recorded 4 wins and a draw in the third round. The top 8 positions are now:

     

B/FWD

 

Latest

 

Opponent

Current Score

         

result

         

1

 

Aus Mixed

27.71

 

19.25

 

Skipper

 

46.96

 
                     

2

 

Cornell

33.13

 

9.39

 

Aus Women

42.52

 
                     

3

 

Livingston

21.68

 

17.85

 

Aus Free

39.53

 
                     

4

 

Terry

33.61

 

5.00

 

Aus Seniors

38.61

 
                     

5

 

Fisher

26.08

 

10.00

 

Aus Youth

36.08

 
                     

6

 

Carter

22.39

 

13.04

 

Aus Women U 26

35.43

 
         

 

         

7

 

Aus Seniors

18.58

 

15.00

 

Terry

 

33.58

 
                     

8

 

Skipper

28.91

 

0.75

 

Aus Mixed

29.66

 

 

On the following board, most East-West pairs were in game and were not thus overly worried by a bad trump break. However, the stakes were higher for those in slam:

Bridge in NZ.png nz map.jpg

West Deals
Both Vul

   

10 6

A 10 9 8 5 3

10 9 4

4 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A Q 8 7

K Q

A Q 6

A K 8 3

Most played in game from the East seat after a 2Club-small opening from East who rebid 2NT. West transferred and East ended in game from the slightly safer East seat.

The slam would normally need the spade finesse to work as except on a diamond lead from South and where North does not put up an honour, there will be a diamond loser. However, that assumes trumps break normally. Whatever the lead and whichever player was declarer, one round of trumps brought some disturbing news as all five were with South.

These were the four hands:

West Deals
Both Vul

K 9 5 2

K J 8 7

J 10 9 7 5

10 6

A 10 9 8 5 3

10 9 4

4 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

A Q 8 7

K Q

A Q 6

A K 8 3

 

J 4 3

J 7 6 4 2

5 3 2

Q 6

One declarer was in slam from the West seat and had received Club-smallJ lead. They won and played dummy’s two hearts. They needed both finesses to work. Assuming they did, in theory, declarer had six side-suit tricks in the East hand and had three top trumps. If they could score three ruffs in the West hand, they would be home. There was, though, a further problem.

They played Club-smallK and on the third round of clubs, South discarded a diamond. Ruff number 1 was followed by the successful diamond finesse (Diamond-small10, J, Q) and now it was essential that West cashed the Diamond-smallA before ruffing the remaining club. Failure to do so enabled South to discard their remaining diamond and allowed South to ruff the Diamond-smallA after West took a successful spade finesse.

Had the Diamond-smallA been cashed immediately after Diamond-smallQ scored, South has no dangerous discard. Declarer can ruff dummy’s last club, take the spade finesse and play Spade-smallA and ruff a spade with Heart-small10 (ruff number 3). Heart-smallA then takes trick 12 and North’s diamond winner and South’s winning trump fall together on trick 13.

The fourth round of the competition is on Friday June 15th. After Round 3, the Kiwi teams still have a substantial lead overall, 274.57 – 205.43 vps

Richard Solomon

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